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New Zealand · 2024/25

Discount Calculator

Calculate the final price after a percentage or fixed discount. Enter the original price and discount amount to find out exactly how much you save.

Last reviewed: 14 January 2026Source: Bank of England — Statistics
Discount Calculator · NZUtility

Rates & sources

Standard amortisation formulas used across UK lenders. Interest rates move daily — confirm with your lender or broker.

Source: Bank of England — Statistics — figures refreshed at the start of each tax year.

When to use this calculator

  • Before comparing lenders, brokers, or repayment options.
  • When you want to test how a different deposit, rate, or term changes affordability.
  • When you need a quick estimate before using a formal quote or agreement in principle.
  • When you are stress-testing your budget against a potential rate rise to see the impact on monthly payments.
  • When you want to understand the full cost of borrowing — not just the monthly figure — before you commit.

A realistic New Zealand planning example

Use these sample inputs as a quick scenario test, then change one variable at a time to compare outcomes.

Original Price (£)

NZ$0.30

Discount (%)

20

After entering these figures, focus on result first and then rerun the tool with a more cautious assumption to understand the realistic range of outcomes rather than relying on a single estimate.

How to read your results

Result

Use this metric to compare scenarios side by side and understand how changes in the key inputs drive the final outcome. If the figure surprises you, isolate one variable at a time and rerun the calculation to identify which assumption is responsible.

Method & assumptionsAuthoritative sources

This calculator determines the discounted price and the cash saving when a percentage reduction is applied to an original price. The formula is straightforward: saving equals original price multiplied by the discount rate, and final price equals original price minus the saving. Where multiple discounts are applied sequentially, each is calculated on the running reduced price — they do not add arithmetically. All figures are pre-tax in contexts where VAT may be added at point of sale, though for most UK consumer retail, VAT is already included in the displayed price. This tool does not account for minimum spend thresholds, excluded categories, or loyalty point redemptions — always read the full terms of any promotional offer before purchasing.

Common mistakes

  • !Mixing up loan amount and property value, which can distort affordability and LTV.
  • !Using a headline rate but forgetting fees, insurance, taxes, or repayment type.
  • !Testing only one term length instead of comparing the payment and total cost together.
  • !Forgetting that a repayment mortgage and an interest-only mortgage produce very different monthly figures and total costs.
  • !Not accounting for the impact of a rate revert after an introductory fixed period ends, which can sharply increase payments.

What to do next

  • Run a second scenario with a higher rate or shorter term so you can see the downside clearly.
  • Compare the result with an affordability or overpayment calculator before applying.
  • Use the related guides below to understand trade-offs before you request live quotes.
  • Note down the monthly payment and total interest for your two or three strongest scenarios so you have a clear comparison ready when you speak to a broker.
  • Check whether making a modest overpayment each month would reduce total interest significantly — run the overpayment calculator next to find out.

Frequently asked

Multiply the original price by the discount percentage, then divide by 100. Subtract this amount from the original price to get the sale price.

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